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Linguistic Norm

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Norm, Linguistic 

the historically determined aggregate of linguistic means in common use in a given language; also, the rules governing the choice and use of such means—rules that have become generally accepted by a specific linguistic community during a specific historical period. The linguistic norm is one of the essential characteristics of a language, ensuring its functioning and historical continuity.

Literary norms represent a special kind of linguistic norm. They become established during the evolution of a literary language in the course of national development. The specific features of the norms of a developed literary language are the relative stability and unity of linguistic means and their rich functional and stylistic differentiation. The orthographic and grammatical norms of a literary language are usually marked by considerable stability, while the lexicon permits great freedom of usage. On the whole, an established literary norm does not exclude the variation of individual linguistic means, but in the standardized national language, variants usually fulfill various stylistic functions.

The formation and subsequent evolution of literary norms are determined by both spontaneous and conscious normalization processes. An important role in the establishment, maintenance, and dissemination of literary norms is played by literature, school, the theater, and especially by radio, television, the press, and other mass media.

The literary norm is recorded in normative grammars and dictionaries, which are periodically revised in conformity with changes in the language itself and in society’s evaluation of its means.

REFERENCES

Itskovich, V. A. Iazykovaia norma. Moscow, 1968.
Havránek, “Zum Problem der Norm in der heutigen Sprachwissenschaft und Sprachkultur.” In A Prague School Reader in Linguistics. Bloom-ington, Ind., 1964.

N. N. SEMENIUK



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For Butler's prose exhibits a certain presumptuous creativity with respect to the established parameters of vocabulary -- that is to say, she invents words -- with a frequency and alacrity that suggests a measure of indifference towards existing linguistic norms, if not outright pride in the creation of a number of awkward composite nouns.
Linguistic normative monitoring practices, or the process by which dominant groups monitor and enforce certain linguistic norms through speech acts or behaviors in a given social context (Brantmeier 2005), aid to reinforce commonsense notions of acceptable language use and serve the nested interests of ruling elite and/or dominant groups within a local context or a larger society.
The roles--Greeks as inventors and of Romans as appliers and propagators of inventions--reappear throughout European cultural history in various casts as Catholicism of the South and Protestantism of the North in religion, as Italy and Flanders in art, as Great Britain and the United States in building and administering colonies and last, but not least, as the laborious preparations of the various national linguistic norms of the continent imitating the classical Latin and Greek canon.
 
 
 
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